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“We continually monitor our regional workload and, when necessary, make adjustments to distribute exam hours proportionally,” NCUA Board Chairman Debbie Matz said. “Several years ago, NCUA moved California, Nevada and several individual credit unions, for supervision purposes, to different regions. Now that the economic downturn has ended, with the economy gaining strength and with the credit union industry generally performing well, we are reconfiguring our regions to create geographically compact districts that better balance workload, improve efficiency and reduce travel costs by more than $900,000 per year.”

Effective January 1, 2014, the following nine states will shift regions as follows:

The implementation of the new regional structure coincides with other changes to strengthen supervision. At the start of 2013, NCUA reorganized existing resources to create an Office of National Examinations and Supervision. The office will begin supervising the nation’s largest consumer credit unions, those with more than $10 billion in assets, at the start of 2014.

The realignment is the product of several months’ work to balance the workload and staffing, and respond to changes in the industry resulting from industry mergers.

Each NCUA region will now have between 114 and 128 examiners, in addition to supervision, special actions and support personnel. NCUA expects the shift to be completed with a minimal disruption to staff and to credit unions, and no staff relocations will be necessary.

Notes SC

NCUA is the independent federal agency created by
the U.S. Congress to regulate, charter and supervise
federal credit unions. With the backing of the full
faith and credit of the United States, NCUA operates
and manages the National Credit Union Share
Insurance Fund, insuring the deposits of more than
99 million account holders in all federal credit
unions and the overwhelming majority of
state-chartered credit unions. At
MyCreditUnion.gov and
Pocket Cents, NCUA also educates the public on consumer protection and financial literacy issues.